Franki Raffles (17 October 1955 – 6 December 1994) was a feminist social documentary photographer, best known for her work on the Zero Tolerance campaign.[1][2] In her lifetime, she exhibited in Stills Gallery, Edinburgh; Mercury Gallery, London; The Corridor Gallery, Fife; Pearce Institute, Glasgow; and First of May Gallery, Edinburgh.[3]
^"Biography". FRANKI RAFFLES ARCHIVE. Retrieved 8 March 2017.
^Mackay, F. (2001). 'The case of zero tolerance', in 'Women and Contemporary Scottish Politics: An Anthology'. Polygon at Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 978-1902930244.
^"Glasgow School of Art – Observing Women at Work". gsa.ac.uk. Retrieved 8 March 2017.
of May Gallery, Edinburgh. FrankiRaffles was born in Salford on 17 October 1955. Her parents were Eric and Gillian Raffles (née Posnansky). She had two...
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Penman (born 1977) Mark Power (born 1959) Graeme Purdy (born 1971) FrankiRaffles (1955–1994) Rankin (born 1966) Tony Ray-Jones (1941–1972) Paul Reas...
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